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An old saying expresses
the thought that "climate is what you expect, weather is what you get."
But what can we expect from the climate of the United States, and the
whole world, in the coming decade — or even in the next millennium?
As all life on Earth depends on a favorable climate to survive, that's
an important question, a question that researchers at NOAA are trying
to answer.
NOAA's research laboratories, Climate Program Office, and research partners conduct a wide range of research into
complex climate systems and how they work. These scientists want to improve
their ability to predict climate variation in both the shorter term, like
cold spells or periods of drought, and over longer terms like centuries
and beyond.
NOAA researchers will continue their consistent
and uninterrupted monitoring of the Earth's atmosphere that can give us
clues about long-term changes in the global climate. The data collected
worldwide by NOAA researchers aids our understanding of, and ability to
forecast changes in, complex climatic systems.
Using ever more powerful and sophisticated
computer systems, NOAA researchers are working on numeric modeling of
climate systems that will help improve the accuracy of climate forecasts. |
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"Are we barreling
down a runaway route toward climatic catastrophe, or will the future
bring relatively benign changes that will not threaten society?
The accumulation of greenhouse gases in the
atmosphere will almost certainly cause Earth's surface temperature
to rise. But we do not know how quickly the planet will warm or
how that warming will affect different regions of the globe.
Answers to such questions will only come
through intense research into the mysteries of Earth's climate system."
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